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How do you reverse a string in C or C++ without requiring a separate buffer to hold the reversed string?

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10 Answers

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Evil C:

#include <stdio.h>

void strrev(char *p)
{
  char *q = p;
  while(q && *q) ++q;
  for(--q; p < q; ++p, --q)
    *p = *p ^ *q,
    *q = *p ^ *q,
    *p = *p ^ *q;
}

int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
  do {
    printf("%s ",  argv[argc-1]); strrev(argv[argc-1]);
    printf("%s\n", argv[argc-1]);
  } while(--argc);

  return 0;
}

(This is XOR-swap thing. Take care to note that you must avoid swapping with self, because a^a==0.)


Ok, fine, let's fix the UTF-8 chars...

#include <bits/types.h>
#include <stdio.h>

#define SWP(x,y) (x^=y, y^=x, x^=y)

void strrev(char *p)
{
  char *q = p;
  while(q && *q) ++q; /* find eos */
  for(--q; p < q; ++p, --q) SWP(*p, *q);
}

void strrev_utf8(char *p)
{
  char *q = p;
  strrev(p); /* call base case */

  /* Ok, now fix bass-ackwards UTF chars. */
  while(q && *q) ++q; /* find eos */
  while(p < --q)
    switch( (*q & 0xF0) >> 4 ) {
    case 0xF: /* U+010000-U+10FFFF: four bytes. */
      SWP(*(q-0), *(q-3));
      SWP(*(q-1), *(q-2));
      q -= 3;
      break;
    case 0xE: /* U+000800-U+00FFFF: three bytes. */
      SWP(*(q-0), *(q-2));
      q -= 2;
      break;
    case 0xC: /* fall-through */
    case 0xD: /* U+000080-U+0007FF: two bytes. */
      SWP(*(q-0), *(q-1));
      q--;
      break;
    }
}

int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
  do {
    printf("%s ",  argv[argc-1]); strrev_utf8(argv[argc-1]);
    printf("%s\n", argv[argc-1]);
  } while(--argc);

  return 0;
}
  • Why, yes, if the input is borked, this will cheerfully swap outside the place.
  • Useful link when vandalising in the UNICODE: http://www.macchiato.com/unicode/chart/
  • Also, UTF-8 over 0x10000 is untested (as I don't seem to have any font for it, nor the patience to use a hexeditor)

    $ ./strrev Räksmörgås ░▒▓○◔◑◕●

    ░▒▓○◔◑◕● ●◕◑◔○▓▒░

    Räksmörgås sågrömskäR

    ./strrev verrts/.

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3  
There's no good reason to use XOR swap outside of an obfuscated code competition. – Chris Conway Oct 13 '08 at 17:02
2  
1. XOR-swap can swap arbitrary size elements without allocating any intermediate storage. (Admittedly not relevant.) 2. I like it. – Anders Eurenius Oct 13 '08 at 17:09
Also: 3. Can be done in a macro without kinky block-macro or typeof stuff. – Anders Eurenius Oct 13 '08 at 17:12
Why not "*p ^= *q, *q ^= *p, *p ^= *q"? – Chris Conway Oct 13 '08 at 17:19
1  
I'd say that if you are going to ask for "In place" without being more specific, it HAS to be the xor thing. Anything else isn't in-place. That said, this has no business being in production code anywhere ever. if you're ever even tempted to use it, quit engineering now. – Bill K Oct 13 '08 at 17:24
show 6 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

In case you are using GLib, it has two functions for that, g_strreverse() and g_utf8_strreverse()

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vote up 6 vote down

Read Kernigham and Richie

void reverse(char s[])
{
      int c, i, j;

      for (i = 0, j = strlen(s)-1; i < j; i++, j--) {
         c = s[i];
         s[i] = s[j];
         s[j] = c;
      }
}
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vote up 4 vote down

If you're looking for reversing NULL terminated buffers, most solutions posted here are OK. But, as Tim Farley already pointed out, these algorithms will work only if it's valid to assume that a string is semantically an array of bytes (i.e. single-byte strings), which is a wrong assumption, I think.

Take for example, the string "año" (year in Spanish).

The Unicode code points are 0x61, 0xf1, 0x6f.

Consider some of the most used encodings:

Latin1 / iso-8859-1 (single byte encoding, 1 character is 1 byte and vice versa):

Original:

0x61, 0xf1, 0x6f, 0x00

Reverse:

0x6f, 0xf1, 0x61, 0x00

The result is OK

UTF-8:

Original:

0x61, 0xc3, 0xb1, 0x6f, 0x00

Reverse:

0x6f, 0xb1, 0xc3, 0x61, 0x00

The result is gibberish and an illegal UTF-8 sequence

UTF-16 Big Endian:

Original:

0x00, 0x61, 0x00, 0xf1, 0x00, 0x6f, 0x00, 0x00

The first byte will be treated as a NUL-terminator. No reversing will take place.

UTF-16 Little Endian:

Original:

0x61, 0x00, 0xf1, 0x00, 0x6f, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00

The second byte will be treated as a NUL-terminator. The result will be 0x61, 0x00, a string containing the 'a' character.

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std::reverse will work for two-byte unicode types, as long as you're using wstring. – Eclipse Oct 13 '08 at 19:02
I'm not very familiar with C++, but my guess is that any respectable standard library function dealing with strings will be able to handle different encodings, so I agree with you. By "these algorithms", I meant the ad-hoc reverse functions posted here. – Juan Pablo Califano Oct 13 '08 at 19:10
vote up 7 vote down

Note that the beauty of std::reverse is that it works with char * strings and std::wstrings just as well as std::strings

void strrev(char *str)
{
    if (str == NULL)
        return;
    std::reverse(str, str + strlen(str));
}
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vote up 6 vote down

In the interest of completeness, it should be pointed out that there are representations of strings on various platforms in which the number of bytes per character varies depending on the character. Old-school programmers would refer to this as DBCS (Double Byte Character Set). Modern programmers more commonly encounter this in UTF-8 (as well as UTF-16 and others). There are other such encodings as well.

In any of these variable-width encoding schemes, the simple algorithms posted here (evil, non-evil or otherwise) would not work correctly at all! In fact, they could even cause the string to become illegible or even an illegal string in that encoding scheme. See Juan Pablo Califano's answer for some good examples.

std::reverse() potentially would still work in this case, as long as your platform's implementation of the Standard C++ Library (in particular, string iterators) properly took this into account.

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std::reverse does NOT take this into account. It reverses value_type's. In the std::string case, it reverses char's. Not characters. – MSalters Oct 14 '08 at 7:24
vote up 12 vote down

Non-evil C, assuming the common case where the string is a null-terminated char array:

#include <stddef.h>
#include <string.h>

/* PRE: str must be either NULL or a pointer to a 
 * (possibly empty) null-terminated string. */
void strrev(char *str) {
  char temp, *end_ptr;

  /* If str is NULL or empty, do nothing */
  if( str == NULL || !(*str) )
    return;

  end_ptr = str + strlen(str) - 1;

  /* Swap the chars */
  while( end_ptr > str ) {
    temp = *str;
    *str = *end_ptr;
    *end_ptr = temp;
    str++;
    end_ptr--;
  }
}
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You don't need the stddef.h and string.h headers. – Robert Gamble Oct 13 '08 at 17:18
I need stddef, but not stdio. – Chris Conway Oct 13 '08 at 17:27
Rather than using a while loop to find the end pointer, can't you use something like end_ptr = str + strlen (str); I know that will do practically the same thing, but I find it clearer. – QuantumPete Oct 13 '08 at 17:43
Fair enough. I was trying (and failing) to avoid the off-by-one error in @uvote's answer. – Chris Conway Oct 13 '08 at 19:57
vote up 13 vote down

You use std::reverse algorithm from the C++ Standard Library.

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Standard Template Library – Federico Ramponi Oct 13 '08 at 17:17
Standard Template Library is a pre-standard term. The C++ standard does not mention it, and former STL components are in the C++ Standard Library. – Nemanja Trifunovic Oct 13 '08 at 17:26
right. i always wonder why so many people still call it "STL" even though it just serves to confuse the matter. would be nicer if more people are like you and call it just "C++ Standard Library" or STL and say "STandard Library" :) – Johannes Schaub - litb Feb 21 at 1:49
vote up 39 vote down
std::reverse(str.begin(), str.end());

This is the simplest way in C++.

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1  
This has way too many upvotes. It's only a sentence answer. – orlandu63 Oct 13 '08 at 19:46
4  
simple question, simple answer... – Greg Rogers Oct 13 '08 at 21:45
Why would the answer need to be any longer? – korona Oct 14 '08 at 8:13
vote up 1 vote down
#include <cstdio>
#include <cstdlib>
#include <string>

void strrev(char *str)
{
        if( str == NULL )
                return;

        char *end_ptr = &str[strlen(str) - 1];
        char temp;
        while( end_ptr > str )
        {
                temp = *str;
                *str++ = *end_ptr;
                *end_ptr-- = temp;
        }
}

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
        char buffer[32];

        strcpy(buffer, "testing");
        strrev(buffer);
        printf("%s\n", buffer);

        strcpy(buffer, "a");
        strrev(buffer);
        printf("%s\n", buffer);

        strcpy(buffer, "abc");
        strrev(buffer);
        printf("%s\n", buffer);

        strcpy(buffer, "");
        strrev(buffer);
        printf("%s\n", buffer);

        strrev(NULL);

        return 0;
}

This code produces this output:

gnitset
a
cba
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@uvote, Don't use strcpy. Ever. If you have to use something like strcpy use strncpy. strcpy is dangerous. By the way C and C++ are two separate languages with separate facilities. I think you're using header files only available in C++ so do you really need an answer in C? – Onorio Catenacci Oct 13 '08 at 16:48
If the string is empty, strlen will return 0 and you will index outside the array which is illegal in C (you can address one element past the end of an array but not one element before). – Robert Gamble Oct 13 '08 at 16:48
strcpy is perfectly safe if the programmer can keep track of the size of his arrays, many would argue that strncpy is less safe since it does not guarantee the resulting string is null terminated. In any case, there is nothing wrong with uvote's use of strcpy here. – Robert Gamble Oct 13 '08 at 16:52
@Onorio Catenacci, strcpy is not dangerous if you know that the source string will fit inside the destination buffer, as in the cases given in the above code. Also, strncpy zero-fills up to the number of chars specified in the size parameter if there is left-over room, which may not be desired. – Chris Young Oct 13 '08 at 16:54
I would consider strcpy to be in the same class of potentially dangerous language features as operator overloading--fine and safe if someone knows how to use it properly but most developers don't know how to use it properly. Hence it should simply be avoided. I stand by my advice. – Onorio Catenacci Oct 13 '08 at 17:27
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